Arikah Map

List of official languages


Contents


Official languages of supra-national institutions

See List of official languages by institution.

Official languages of sovereign countries

There are approximately 105 languages in this category.

: Top - 0–9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Afrikaans:

Amharic:

Albanian:

Arabic:

Armenian:

Assamese:

Aymara:

Azeri:

Belarusian:

Bengali:

Bislama:

Bosnian:

Bulgarian:

Catalan:

Chinese (see also List of Chinese dialects):

Croatian

Czech:

Danish

Dari:

Dhivehi:

Dutch:

Dzongkha:

English (see also List of countries where English is an official language):

Estonian:

Fijian

Filipino:

Finnish:

French (see also List of countries where French is an official language):

Frisian:

Georgian:

German:

Greek:

Guaraní

Gujarati:

Haitian Creole:

Hebrew:

Hindi

Hiri Motu:

Hungarian:

Icelandic:

Indonesian:

Irish Gaelic is the national and first official language of:

Italian:

Japanese:

Kannada:

Kashmiri:

Kazakh:

Khmer:

Korean:

Kurdish:

Kyrgyz:

Lao:

Latin:

Latvian:

Lithuanian:

Luxembourgish:

Macedonian:

Malay:

Malayalam:

Maltese:

Māori:

Marathi:

Moldovan (asserted by Moldova state representatives to be distinct from Romanian; most linguists remain skeptical):

Mongolian

Ndebele:

Nepali:

New Zealand Sign Language:

Northern Sotho:

Norwegian:

Oriya:

Pashtu:

Persian:

Polish:

Portuguese:

Punjabi:

Quechua

Romanian:

Rhaeto-Romansh:

Russian:

Sanskrit:

Serbian:

Sindhi:

Sinhala:

Slovak

Slovene:

Somali:

Sotho:

Spanish:

Swahili:

Swazi:

Swedish:

Tajik:

Tamil:

Telugu:

Tetum:

Thai:

Tok Pisin:

Tsonga:

Tswana:

Turkish:

Turkmen:

Ukrainian:

Urdu:

Uzbek:

Venda:

Vietnamese:

Welsh:

Xhosa:

Zulu:

Ranking of languages by number of sovereign countries in which they are official

Official languages of subnational entities

Albanian:

Aranese see Occitan

Basque:

Cantonese Chinese:

Catalan:

Chipewyan:

Cree:

Dogrib:

English:

French:

Galician:

NOTE: Whether Galician and Portuguese are variants of the same language, is a matter of debate among linguists. However both Governments and their speakers regard them as distinct but close languages

Gwichʼin:

Hawaiian:

Inuktitut:

Inuvialuktun:

Occitan (Aranese):

Rusyn:

Mazandarani:

Sami:

Slavey:

Spanish:

Tahitian:

Tibetan:

Uyghur:

Yiddish:

Zhuang:

A map of official languages: (note: source is CIA World Factbook. Countries that include several official languages only use one, often to avoid adding languages to the chart unnecessarily, preventing confusion. In showing de facto as well as de jure official languages, the map employs a looser definition of "official language" than that used in this article.)Official Languages Maps

See also

Categories


Lists of languages | Lists of countries

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